Thursday, January 14, 2016

New column day

Here, on the appalling failure of both the province of Saskatchewan and the city of Regina to contribute a nickel to a long-overdue Housing First pilot project.

For further reading...
- D.C. Fraser reported on the project here, with this serving as the money quote:

The one-year pilot project will get $400,000 from the federal
government. Roberts is confident that money will lead to success, but is
realistic about how far those funds can be stretched.

“It’s only $400,000. There’s only so much you can do with that, only
so many people you can hire,” he said. “If we suddenly shoot for the
stars and say we’re going to end homelessness in Regina tomorrow, that’s
not a realistic expectation.”

It is unlikely the city or province will add money to what is being
made available by the federal government, according to Roberts. Other
jurisdictions using Housing First models have received money from other
levels of government.

- Fraser's follow-up story shows Michael Fougere lapping up credit and attention notwithstanding the city's lack of any contribution, while the province simply stays on the sidelines. And CBC's report mentions how few people are expected to be helped in the first year.
- As for the other past broken promises and failed plans mentioned in the story, the report (PDF) of the provincial government's much-ballyhooed advisory group on poverty was announced last August. And Fraser noted this week that a promised strategy has never been unveiled.
- Meanwhile, Regina points to its committee involvement and some off-hand mentions of homelessness in housing plans (PDF) without seeming to go any further. And Shawn Fraser has rightly highlighted the city's refusal to actually take steps of its own even while it endorses federal action.